"The remaining 37*100000-2000"

Adeline 2022-01-27 08:05:20

"No matter when and where, the search for roots and the resonance of goodness are the eternal common language of mankind." ——Inscription when young Sheru lost his brother at the train station, and after suffering one after another, Finally adopted by the Brierley couple from Australia. However, as an adult, Salo was awakened by nostalgia at a party. Determined to find his relatives, he finally found his hometown through difficulties and obstacles, and was reunited with his biological mother. The seemingly simple plot, under the universal theme of "tracing to the source", has more room for creation in the image. The cooperation between the director and the actors also makes the whole story very delicate and moving. And the blessing of "adapted from a true story" gives the movie the power to directly hit people's hearts. Therefore, "LION" gives people the feeling of a trickle and finally converging into a river: longing, regret, exhaustion, excitement, helplessness... Many feelings erupted together when mother and son were reunited. With tears in your eyes, you find that with Sheru's experience you are already in the play and have empathy for the character. The New York Times film critic put it this way: "As long as you've been a kid...you'll be blown away by this movie." Actually, for me, perhaps the most shocking part of the film wasn't this hardship the trip home itself. Sheru's adoptive mother's dramatic self-confession: "There are enough people in the world that having a baby doesn't change anything. But if it can help those children who are suffering and give them a chance to integrate into the world, maybe there is a point." "Fang is the most exciting part. Its shock is not only due to its dramatic twists and turns, but also its detachment like a divine comedy... Thinking of the couple and then adopting another mentally abnormal boy, and painstakingly raising him up. Imagine being an ordinary person, even if he chooses to adopt because he is unable to bear children, he must have some requirements for the adopted child, at least he should be a normal person... If there is no such lofty goal, who would be asking for trouble? In fact, witnessing Sheru's beggar-turned-rich life after he was adopted by the Brierleys, I can't help but wonder: Is the child lucky or unfortunate? If you think about it, the answer must be luck. After all, India has 100,000 lost children every year. And Mrs who helped Sheru. Sood has worked for a non-profit society for 37 years before helping about 2,000 Indian children find new parents. Among them, those with wealthy families and model parents must be rare. Sheru can meet the Brierleys and it can be said that the goddess of luck really cares about them. However, what if Sheru wasn't so lucky? What if he didn't meet a well-meaning customer in the restaurant and sent him to the police station for help? What if he didn't meet Ms. Sood to find his biological mother and seek adoption? What if the family that adopted him was less wealthy and selfish? What if he didn't meet friends who sympathized with what happened to him and advised him? So, even if Sheru can use his extraordinary observation and alertness to escape the pursuit of human traffickers, escape the trap of child sex trafficking, and survive hunger... He will probably only spend the rest of his life wandering around, or even not Dying in a fight or disease at the end of your life... not to mention being able to buy a computer and be educated to use it to find your homeland! The movie "The Lion" must have been wiped out! Some might say it was Sensational, if that counts as sensational. What about those kids? What about those 37*100000-2000 lost Indian children? What if they didn't meet other charities or "good people"? ! Yes, "nice people". Two simple words! How many people were raised to be it? How many people forget it when they are really needed to do what it is supposed to do? Yes, sometimes it's hard to be a good person! But sometimes it's as simple as a phone call! Maybe that phone call to the police station can change a person's life! Most of the time, when the relevant measures in the country are more and more perfect. The remaining 37*100000-2000 children may no longer need such things as luck, because they will meet countless people to guide them the way home! No need to run around, avoid danger, and wait for the goddess of fate The advent of... As Sheru said at the end of his autobiographical novel "The Long Road to Home": In retrospect, everything I experienced seemed to be arranged in the dark. In fact, every great turning point in my fate is simply because I met "good people". Looking back, everything I went through seemed like it was planned out of nowhere. In fact, every great turning point in my fate is simply because I met "good people". Looking back, everything I went through seemed like it was planned out of nowhere. In fact, every great turning point in my fate is simply because I met "good people". Looking back, everything I went through seemed like it was planned out of nowhere. In fact, every great turning point in my fate is simply because I met "good people". Looking back, everything I went through seemed like it was planned out of nowhere. In fact, every great turning point in my fate is simply because I met "good people". How many people were raised to be it? How many people forget it when they are really needed to do what it is supposed to do? Yes, sometimes it's hard to be a good person! But sometimes it's as simple as a phone call! Maybe that phone call to the police station can change a person's life! Most of the time, when the relevant measures in the country are more and more perfect. The remaining 37*100000-2000 children may no longer need such things as luck, because they will meet countless people to guide them the way home! No need to run around, avoid danger, and wait for the goddess of fate The advent of... As Sheru said at the end of his autobiographical novel "The Long Road to Home": In retrospect, everything I experienced seemed to be arranged in the dark. In fact, every great turning point in my fate is simply because I met "good people". How many people were raised to be it? How many people forget it when they are really needed to do what it is supposed to do? Yes, sometimes it's hard to be a good person! But sometimes it's as simple as a phone call! Maybe that phone call to the police station can change a person's life! Most of the time, when the relevant measures in the country are more and more perfect. The remaining 37*100000-2000 children may no longer need such things as luck, because they will meet countless people to guide them the way home! No need to run around, avoid danger, and wait for the goddess of fate The advent of... As Sheru said at the end of his autobiographical novel "The Long Road to Home": In retrospect, everything I experienced seemed to be arranged in the dark. In fact, every great turning point in my fate is simply because I met "good people".

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Extended Reading

Lion quotes

  • Saroo Brierley: I'm sorry you couldn't have your own kids.

    Sue Brierley: What are you saying?

    Saroo Brierley: We... we... weren't blank pages, were we? Like your own would have been. You weren't just adopting us but our past as well. I feel like we're killing you.

    Sue Brierley: I could have had kids.

    Saroo Brierley: What?

    Sue Brierley: We chose not to have kids. We wanted the two of you. That's what we wanted. We wanted the two of you in our lives.That's what we chose.

    [pause]

    Sue Brierley: That's one of the reasons I fell in love with your dad.

    [pause]

    Sue Brierley: Because we both felt as if... the world has enough people in it. Have a child, couldn't guarantee it will make anything better. But to take a child that's suffering like you boys were. Give you a chance in the world. That's something.

  • Saroo Brierley: Do you have any idea what it's like knowing my real brother and mother spent every day of their lives looking for me? Huh? How every day my real brother screams my name? Can you imagine the pain they must be in not knowing where I am?